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Since society has so much influence on adolescents because of the high prevalence of obesity and the pressure to be skinny, many girls are turning to unhealthy ways of controlling their weight. Prioritizing structured family meals that take place in a positive environment can protect girls from destructive eating habits. It doesn't have to be a home-cooked meal. The idea is to bring people together.

Eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia have risen steadily. Diagnoses now peak among girls ages 11 to 13.

Although both anorexia and bulimia are much more common in girls than in boys, males are affected as well.

The sports connection

Both girls and boys are at higher risk for developing an eating disorder in certain sports that emphasize thinness or that have weight restrictions. For girls, the critical sports are gymnastics, ice-skating, and ballet. For boys, the sports include gymnastics, running, bodybuilding, rowing, wrestling, ballet, and swimming. Males who are jockeys also are at higher risk for an eating disorder.

What to look for

Girls with anorexia:

Intensely fear being fat

Feel fat despite extreme thinness because of a distorted body image

Are typically perfectionists with low self-esteem

Eat very little, count calories and may weigh portions

Often say they are vegetarians

Often lose weight rapidly

Deny feeling hungry and avoid eating in front of others

May exercise compulsively

Withdraw from social activities

Girls with bulimia:

Eat huge amounts within hours, then "purge" their bodies by taking laxatives or vomiting

Often make excuses to go to the bathroom right after meals

May eat abnormally large amounts of food without gaining weight

May have average or above-average weights

Often have pitted or eroded tooth enamel from stomach acid in the mouth after vomiting